Chaos Group launches V-Ray Next for Maya

LOS ANGELES — Chaos Group (chaosgroup.com) has released V-Ray Next for Maya, a new version of its Academy Award-winning renderer that brings the power of scene intelligence, faster production rendering, and streamlined Maya workflows to high-end VFX and animation projects.

V-Ray Next for Maya's overall rendering performance is now 25 percent faster on average. As artists work, they’ll find more speed improvements through scene intelligence, which analyzes and optimizes render calculations automatically with no added input. Scene intelligence has been integrated with new features like the Adaptive Dome Light, helping users render content an additional 2-7x faster depending on the scene.

“V-Ray Next is designed to support Maya artists at every level, providing faster workflows through a new set of features and optimizations,” explains Vlado Koylazov, CTO and co-founder at Chaos Group. “Now with better IPR and viewport rendering, artists can concentrate more on their creative ideas and the details that make their scenes and characters come alive.”

V-Ray Next features a dramatically improved IPR that runs directly from the Maya viewport or the V-Ray Frame Buffer, ensuring faster interactive speeds and workflows. In addition to reducing time to first pixel, improved interactive rendering allows for continuous updates while editing or even scrubbing through animations. It’s also now possible to render V-Ray-quality playblasts for animation previz.

For faster look development, V-Ray Next for Maya adds a new “Debug” shading mode that allows artists to isolate selected materials, textures, objects and lights to quickly analyze and easily fine-tune specific aspects of their scene. And with the new GPU-accelerated AI Denoiser, noise-free updates are now possible at interactive speeds, providing instant insights into lighting setups.

In addition to faster IPR, V-Ray Next for Maya brings a production-ready GPU renderer to professional studios. Built on a new GPU rendering architecture, V-Ray GPU is now 2x faster on average, compared to the previous version. V-Ray GPU Next adds support for fast rendering of volumetric effects such as smoke, fire and fog. And the addition of GPU bucket rendering adds support for faster distributed rendering as well as Cryptomatte output for better control in compositing.

V-Ray Next for Maya is available now for Windows, Linux and Mac OS X. A full workstation license is priced at $1,040, with upgrades available for $420. V-Ray Next for Maya also introduces a subscription option, priced at $470 (annual) and $80 (monthly).

You May Also Like

LONDON — Post production facility Nineteentwenty has added Jon Hurst as managing director. He was the former co-founder of Big Buoy and will now work to grow the Nineteentwenty business from its Londo ...

LOS ANGELES — MPC contributed visual effects to a number of commercials that appeared during last night’s Super Bowl broadcast. The studio’s credits include work for Diet Coke ( Because I Can ), Toyot ...